Saints, scholars and the idealized past in Philippine Muslim separatism

(...) The Muslim separatist movement that began in 1968 had dual goals. It was primarily an ethno-nationalist endeavour that had as its primary goal the creation of a Philippine Muslim nation - a nation-state governed by Philippine Muslims and modelled on the sultanates of the precolonial period. Th...

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Détails bibliographiques
Auteur principal: McKenna, Tom (Auteur)
Type de support: Imprimé Article
Langue:Anglais
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Publié: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 2002
Dans: The Pacific review
Année: 2002, Volume: 15, Numéro: 4, Pages: 539-553
Sujets non-standardisés:B Séparatisme
B Ethnocentrisme
B État
B Minorité
B Religion
B Communauté religieuse
B Musulman
B Groupe démographique
B Identité religieuse
B Islam et politique
B Nationalisme
B Enseignement
B Histoire
B Philippinen
B Philippinen Religion Religiöse Bevölkerungsgruppe Minorité Muslime Islam et politique Séparatisme Religiöse Lehre Histoire des religions Verhältnis Religionsgemeinschaft - Staat Moro National Liberation Front (Philippines) Nationalisme Ethnocentrisme
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Résumé:(...) The Muslim separatist movement that began in 1968 had dual goals. It was primarily an ethno-nationalist endeavour that had as its primary goal the creation of a Philippine Muslim nation - a nation-state governed by Philippine Muslims and modelled on the sultanates of the precolonial period. The second goal of the Muslim separatist movement was to reform local religious and cultural practices under the leadership of a new set of religious leaders. To understand the place of atavism and puritanism in the Philippine Muslim separatist movement The author review the largely local tradition of saints and the more universal Muslim institution of religious scholars as they have interacted in the contemporary Muslim Philippines. He conciders contradictions between revanchist and reformatist goals of the movement.(...) (Pac Rev/DÜI)
ISSN:0951-2748
Contient:In: The Pacific review